Why Grexit Cannot Save Greece (But Staying in the Euro Area Might)
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LSE ‘Europe in Question’ Discussion Paper Series Why Grexit cannot save Greece (but staying in the Euro area might) Chrysafis Iordanoglou & Manos Matsaganis LEQS Paper No. 123/2017 August 2017 Editorial Board Dr Abel Bojar Dr Bob Hancke Dr Jonathan White Dr Sonja Avlijas Mr Hjalte Lokdam All views expressed in this paper are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the editors or the LSE. © Chrysafis Iordanoglou & Manos Matsaganis Why Grexit cannot save Greece (but staying in the Euro area might) Chrysafis Iordanoglou* & Manos Matsaganis** Abstract Grexit was narrowly averted in summer 2015. Nevertheless, the view that Greece might be better off outside the Euro area has never really gone away. Moreover, although Marine Le Pen’s bid for the French presidency was frustrated in May 2017, in Italy a disparate coalition, encompassing Beppe Grillo’s Movimento Cinque Stelle as well as Matteo Salvini’s Lega Nord, has called for a referendum on exiting the Euro. In this context, our argument that Grexit cannot save Greece may be of some relevance to national debates elsewhere in Europe. The paper examines the case for Grexit by offering a detailed account of its liKely effects. Its structure is as follows. Section 2 analyses the transition, with the two currencies (old and new) coexisting. Section 3 charts the challenges facing the GreeK economy in the short term, after the new national currency has become legal tender. Section 4 assesses prospects in the medium term, with Grexit complete and the new currency drastically devalued. Section 5 reviews the underlying weaknesses of Greece’s growth regime and explains why these are unrelated to the nominal exchange rate. Section 6 discusses the conditions for an investment-led recovery, and shows why tacKling them would be more difficult outside the Euro area. Section 7 sums up and concludes. Keywords: Greece, Grexit, Eurozone, growth regime * Panteion University, Athens ** Politecnico di Milano & Athens University of Economics & Business Email: [email protected] Why Grexit cannot save Greece Table of Contents 1. Introduction .................................................................................................................1 2. The transition ..............................................................................................................3 3. The short term .............................................................................................................7 4. The medium term .................................................................................................... 14 5. Structural and institutional blockages ............................................................ 16 6. Recovery within the Euro area ........................................................................... 25 7. Conclusion .................................................................................................................. 27 References .......................................................................................................................... 28 Acknowledgements An earlier version of this paper was presented at the 29th annual meeting of the Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics in Lyon (29 June - 1 July 2017). The authors would like to thank participants for their comments. We are also grateful to Isaak Sampethai for his close reading. Manos Matsaganis would like to acknowledge financial support under the Reconciling Economic and Social Europe project (www.resceu.eu), funded by the European Research Council (Advanced Grant no. 340534). Chrysafis Iordanoglou & Manos Matsaganis Why Grexit cannot save Greece (but staying in the Euro area might) 1. Introduction The 2010s have been dramatic for Greece – far more so than for any other European country. GDP declined by 26% in 2008-2013, then stagnated (+0.1% in 2013-2016). 1 Compared to the west European average, relative living standards in Greece, having risen from 74% in 2000 to 85% in 2009, fell to 62% in 2016 (below their 1961 level). 2 Employment, earnings and disposable incomes all plummeted, while unemployment and poverty soared. The Greek crisis has few historical precedents. It rivals the US Great Depression of 1929- 1932. The political upheaval discredited the parties that ruled the country during the previous four decades, and led in January 2015 to the election of an anti- austerity coalition, whose ascendancy was confirmed in the snap general election of September 2015. The ensuing confrontation with the country’s European partners, culminated with the government signing up to a third 1 By comparison, Spain (-8.9%), Italy (-7.6%) and Portugal (-7.8%) all suffered a less deep recession over the same period, and have since experienced some recovery (Spain: +7.9%; Italy: +1.8%; Portugal: +3.9%). See GDP and main components (output, expenditure and income) [nama_10_gdp]. Source: Eurostat. 2 Portugal and Spain also lost ground in the early years of the Eurozone crisis, but have more recently narrowed the distance. See Gross domestic product at current market prices per head of population (HVGDPR) in purchasing power standards, relative to the EU-15 average. Source: AMECO Eurostat. 1 Why Grexit cannot save Greece austerity programme in July 2015 just a week after the voters had rejected a version of it in the July 2015 referendum. It transpired that a quicK fix to the Greek crisis was not possible. The view that Greece might be better off outside the Euro area gained some ascendancy. Eminent economists urged Greeks to vote ‘No’ at the July 2015 referendum – on the grounds that uncertainty and dwindling living standards were still preferable to ‘the policy regime of the past five years’ (Paul Krugman) or to the ‘unconscionable torture of the present’ (Joseph Stiglitz). In Europe, the main supporters of a ‘No’ vote were mostly of a different political persuasion. The xenophobic Right, led by France’s Marine Le Pen, Nigel Farage of UKIP and Matteo Salvini of Italy’s Lega Nord, all came out in force, cheering the Greeks all the way to Grexit. Shortly after the referendum, and before the Greek government’s capitulation, Germany’s Wolfgang Schäuble circulated a non- paper floating the idea that “Greece should be offered swift negotiations on a time-out from the Eurozone, (...) over at least the next 5 years”. Within Greece, opposition to the Euro remained a minority view. Popular Unity (a party founded by 25 MPs who left SYRIZA in protest at the new austerity programme, explicitly committed to Grexit) foundered at the September 2015 general election. According to the Eurobarometer survey3, no more than 29% of the population were against the single currency. Even though Grexit was narrowly averted in the summer of 2015, it has never really gone away. As late as February 2017, the ruling coalition seemed split between two alternative courses of action: either abide by the terms of the July 2015 agreement (i.e. reverse its long-held hostility to reforms, and accept a 3 The corresponding proportion of those opposed to “a European economic and monetary union with a single currency, the Euro” was 37% in Italy, 25% in Spain, and 23% in Portugal. See Standard Eurobarometer 86, November 2016. 2 Chrysafis Iordanoglou & Manos Matsaganis greater dose of austerity), or prepare for exiting the Euro area and returning to a national currency. Beyond Greece, after Marine Le Pen’s bid for the French presidency was frustrated in May 2017, attention has shifted to Italy, where a disparate coalition encompassing Beppe Grillo’s Movimento Cinque Stelle as well as Matteo Salvini’s Lega Nord, has called for a referendum on exiting the Euro. In view of that, our argument that Grexit cannot save Greece may be of some relevance to national debates elsewhere in Europe. The paper examines the case for Grexit by offering a detailed account of its likely effects. Its structure is as follows: section 2 analyses the transition, with the two currencies (old and new) coexisting. Section 3 charts the challenges facing the GreeK economy in the short term, after the new national currency has become legal tender. Section 4 assesses prospects in the medium term, with Grexit complete and the new currency drastically devalued. Section 5 reviews the underlying weaknesses of Greece’s growth regime, and explains why these are unrelated to the nominal exchange rate. Section 6 discusses the conditions for an investment-led recovery, and shows why tacKling them would be more difficult outside the Euro area. Section 7 sums up and concludes. 2. The transition Between the moment of the decision to abandon the Euro and the establishment of the “New Drachma” as sole legal tender, there would inevitably be a period of transition. New banknotes have to be printed and new coins minted. This will take a few months and it is unlikely that it can happen in less than a month 3 Why Grexit cannot save Greece (introducing the Euro in physical form tooK about two years).4 Until the New Drachma becomes physically available, both the Euro and some alternative means of payment would be circulating in parallel. One can thinK of a number of solutions to the parallel currency issue. All of them would require a drastic intensification of the existing capital controls, to prevent a massive bank run that would empty all Euro-denominated deposits. Issuing government-bacKed IOUs 5 (i.e. promissory notes) would probably suffer from severe credibility problems, disrupting the existing payment systems and creating confusion